In an announcement that’s shocked many, GM has said it will no longer provide funding for Cruise, its robotaxi service. Instead, the automaker says it’s pouring resources into autonomous ...
General Motors will no longer fund its Cruise division's robotaxi development, the company said on Tuesday. The Detroit automaker cited the increasingly competitive robotaxi market, capital ...
GM is halting Cruise robotaxi development, citing the resources needed and growing competition. Cruise was attempting to compete with Alphabet's Waymo, Zoox, and potentially Tesla's Cybercab.
General Motors is pivoting from self-driving robotaxies to focus on developing autonomous driving technology for personal vehicles in the future. The company made the announcement late Tuesday ...
General Motors announced Tuesday that it would end funding for its Cruise robotaxi service. The automaker said it would shift its focus to the development of advanced driver-assistance systems, ...
General Motors (GM) has decided to move on from its Cruise driverless ride-hailing service. The automaker said it will no longer fund its Cruise division’s robotaxi development as it plans to ...
General Motors is winding down its Cruise robotaxi division, according to a new report from Bloomberg. GM's exit from the market leaves Google's Waymo and Tesla as the two main names in autonomous ...
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. I first rode in a self-driving vehicle in 1991. Haven’t looked back. When General Motors announced earlier this month their subsidiary ...
DETROIT (AP) — General Motors said Tuesday it will retreat from the robotaxi business and stop funding its money-losing Cruise autonomous vehicle unit. Instead the Detroit automaker will focus ...
Despite General Motor’s decision to shutter its Cruise robotaxi business earlier this month, the U.S. has never been closer to a driverless future. For the autonomous vehicle industry ...